We have always loved maps. Maps combine artistry and utility in a way that very few disciplines allow.
But of course, it's always been a trade-off. The beautiful, ornate maps from centuries past told you where the major landmasses were, but provided little detail. And today's GPS-based maps provide an unprecedented level of accuracy but uninspiring in their presentation.
Machi Takahashi, founder and CEO of Stroly, has a best-of-both world's solution.
We also talk in-depth about the unique challenges facing women founders in Japan, and what can be done to make things better for everyone.
It's a great discussion, and I think you will really enjoy it.
Show Notes
Strolling with stories: How Stroly works
How to make Google Maps community-oriented
How Stroly pivoted to prosperity during Covid-19
How industry will be using VR after Covid-19 ends
Why corporate spinouts are so hard in Japan
Why Japan has problems commercializing fundamental research
The challenges female founders face in Japan
How Japanese women are taught they should not really be CEOs
Why Japanese startups need to think globally
Links from the Founder
Everything you ever wanted to know about Stroly
Connect with Machi on LinkedIn
Women's Startup Labs
Ari Hori on Disrupting Japan
Leave a comment
Transcript
Welcome to Disrupting Japan, straight talk from Japan’s most successful entrepreneurs. I’m Tim Romero and thanks for joining me.
One of the most common themes on Disrupting Japan is the intersection of tradition and high technology. Stories about what things that we’ve known and loved for generations can teach us about how we should use technology today.
Now, I’m not sure how much of this is due to the fact that I personally find such startups fascinating and important, and how much of it is due to the fact that there’s something about Japanese startups and Japanese culture that encourages and appreciates these kinds of innovations.
Well, today, we sit down with Machi Takahashi of Stroly and we discussed that while mobile GPS mapping is awesome, there’s something important that we’ve lost in our rapid adoption of that technology and it’s something that Stroly is bringing back.
We also look into how COVID is not only changing things but changing some things for the better and how this is really a time for innovative startups to shine.
And we also talk in some detail about the challenges women founders face in Japan and some simple ways to improve the situation. But you know, Machi tells that story much better than I can, so let’s get right to the interview.
Interview
Tim: I’m sitting here with Machi Takahashi, the CEO of Stroly, so thanks for sitting down with me.
Machi: Thank you, Tim, for having me.
Tim: Stroly makes custom maps that are overlaid onto Google Maps, but I think you can explain it a lot better than I can, so why don’t you explain briefly what Stroly is, how it works?
Machi: Okay, sure. So, Stroly is our company name and also the name of our service and it means to stroll with story, so we came up with this idea to combine illustrated maps with GPS positioning while we were developing a new guide system for a theme park, and instead of choosing Google Maps, we chose to use this beautiful hand-drawn illustrated map of this theme park and we came up with this technology to combine these latitudes and longitudes on top of these illustrated maps.
Tim: Okay, so when people are visiting the theme park, instead of looking at Google Maps or Apple Maps as they are wandering around the park, they would look at those kind of cute hand-drawn illustrated maps and they’d navigate on top of that?
Machi: Right, exactly. So, we have this technology where we can adapt these GPS positioning on top of any kind of a map in any form so people can actually exaggerate some of the spots in the map, and then actually draw some of the spots in the map.
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